I don't know why but from the title I was kinda expecting and even hoping for the opposite - that you'd type it up and it'd make a ye olde letter PDF/jpeg and attach it to the response :-)
One thing more annoying that reading someone's horrible handwriting is having to install a custom font just to read an email. I honestly do not know whether the security setting on my work machine even allows for custom/bespoke fonts in email. It has never come up before.
Sites like [calligraphr](https://www.calligraphr.com/en/) can help you create fonts from your handwriting. Also, here's an old project for creating something that looks handwritten on paper.
Definitely want to try that too!! In general I think people sending an email expect a text format reply, but there's something sad about losing that handwritten letter :) Plus of course, drawings → attachments!
... Dear nigerian prince,
I hope this letter finds you well, and that the troubles of your father are now long gone. Here now the days are shorter, you can see the birds flying south, probably to more sunny places like the ones you tell me about in your letters.
I cannot wait for the day that we finally meet!
Please tell your busniess manager that I will deliver the requested funds myself, as I plan to visit your country soon.
I don't have a Remarkable so it's not clear to me how the file gets to your server. Are you sending it directly from the Remarkable or connecting a Remarkable cloud account?
This is connecting via the reMarkable cloud tool, but everything is abstracted into a `DocumentManager`, so you could also use, for example, the document manager that just drops PDFs into the filesystem [1] so that you can use whatever tool you like, including, say, iPad, writing with a wacom on your laptop, etc.
I've got a Boox Note Air and it has AI handwriting recognition of handwritten notes made on the device, next to general handwriting recognition when responding to for example e-mail or writing in apps.
Totally, the reMarkable has handwriting recognition as well — this project was partially borne of the workflow of "write text, auto transcribe, send to a computer, copy paste into an email." How do you like the Boox? My friend loves his!
I love it as well, care it with me everywhere, with termux and a bluetooth keyboard use it as little programming machine and second i make notes, and during a dzogchen teaching yesterday use it to branch into different questions and topics while notetaking with claude sonnet. it's mind expanding, of course I could also use an ipad with apple pen for this, but this has a more natural screen and longer lasting battery.
Android apps are also a killer feature, my phone ran out of battery, so I just listened to podcasts and e-books on the boox.
My understanding is that business shorthands were phonetic, so they were very useful for taking notes that would later be transcribed by the same person that took them, but much less useful for written communication between various dialects of the anglophony.
(did the period when shorthand was a school subject coincide with the former use of "eye dialect" by writers?)
ha, I learned shorthand in second grade (and yes, it was already an antique by then). I wonder what a multimodal language model would say to shorthand...